Imagine a world in which you can instantly monitor your body as if it was a computer. Your glucose levels, heart rate, blood pressure – all instantaneously available without having to administer a test. Imagine a world in which you cut yourself and within moments, your body has healed itself via tiny machines implanted within us. As of now, widespread nanotechnology is not science fiction, it is reality.. And with that reality comes the race between countries to be #1 in Nanoweaponization.

For over thirty years, Del Monte was a leader in the development of microelectronics, integrated circuit sensors, and microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) for IBM and Honeywell. His patents and technology developments are currently used by Honeywell, IBM, and Samsung. As a Honeywell Executive Director, he led hundreds of physicists, engineers, and technology professionals engaged in micro to nanotechnology development for both the Department of Defense and commercial applications.

As global tensions rise in a more-connected-than-ever world, governments are constantly trying to find ways to stay ahead of enemies, and nanoweapons are no exception. Potential nanoweapons include toxic nanoparticles as a poison able to cross biological membranes their bulk counterparts are unable to cross and therefore can be readily absorbed. Another such nanoweapon could be drones the size of insects – tiny drones capable of infiltrating enemy lines unnoticed.

Why We Must Hardware AI if We Want to Sustain the Human Race – A Conversation with Louis Del MonteExcerpt:Can We Program “Friendly”?“If you look at the most rudimentary life forms”, explains Del Monte, “an insect for example…it naturally seeks protection from its environment and harm.” Try to imagine a machine that has intelligence that equals or exceeds that of humans. We really don’t know that an intelligent machine running on software would “work” any better, or more morally, than a human. Just like in software, we have rules and laws for society, though humans end up breaking these laws all the time for a myriad of reasons, which is why we have need for a police to enforce those laws. Last updated on March 27, 2017 by Daniel Faggellahttps://www.techemergence.com/why-we-must-hardware-ai-if-we-want-to-sustain-the-human-race-a-conversation-with-louis-del-monte/

Purdue University Mechanical Engineering- YouTubePublished on Feb 12, 2018 – David Cappelleri and his Purdue team develop micro-robots, smaller than a millimeter. Their latest creations can “tumble” over obstacles in both dry and wet environments, using a rotating magnetic field. They envision biomedical micro-robots being injected into patients for super-focused drug delivery.

WE HAVE TWO WINNERS! Grand Prize Robert, Virginia ANDBonus Prize Mary Kate, New York

Grand Prize Question:One of the simplest nanoweapon acts as a poison that is able to cross biological membranes. What is the name of the nanoweapon?

Bonus Prize Question:Give the complete name of the book, author Louis A. Del Monte will be discussing on One Cell One Light Radio’s show today (Wednesday, May 16, 2018)

GRAND PRIZE and Bonus Prize Winners will get: Baci Mi products, tea, books, even Mr. Del Monte’s book (from the Dragon Gate Bookstore, Honolulu, Hawaii) and gifts from Cricket the K-Town Kitty and the movie In-Human. The grand prize winner will get a Dragon – Kung Fu Tea pot while the bonus prize winner will get a special cup that has a Koi in it.